Thursday, 29 December 2011

I wobbled a bit today.My husband was going to meet up with a former work colleague, who now
lives overseas.He visits every year or
two, and always calls my husband to meet up.I don’t know him well, but that doesn’t
usually bother me.This guy used to be
my husband’s young workmate, he looked up to my husband, and I admit I occasionally
wanted to take under my wing so I could spruce him up so he could find a
woman!

But time has moved on, and he’s living overseas, married
with two kids.And for some reason this
morning, I felt old, barren and fat.And I couldn’t bear the thought of going and
being polite about his two kids, meeting his young, fertile, no doubt slim wife.So I
sent my husband alone.

I haven’t felt like that for a long time.With the benefit of years, I am so much
better able to cope, and with the benefit of years, I am so much more in tune
with myself, and my emotions..And on
reflection, I think my insecurity was/is related to a family issue that upset me, rather than my infertility.After all, I managed to spend Christmas Day
with three kids running around, and had a good time.

Still, whilst it undeniably gets better, you
do get the occasional slap in the face with a wet fish.I had mine this morning.By tonight, I’m determined it will be fried.

Sunday, 25 December 2011

It's Christmas morning. No children running around this house. Just an aged mother, a husband reading a book, and me on the computer. That's okay. It's quiet, peaceful, and we'll see at least one kid at lunch-time.

I remember how horrible this time of year can be - both my ectopics occurred in December. And so to my bloggy friends who are still struggling with this time of year, with the obsession with family and mandatory happiness, and with friends and relatives announcing their pregnancies today (that has happened to me too), I send you my love. I hope that you can find some peace today and beyond. It will come. However horrible you feel today, it will come.

And remember, when in doubt ... there's always chocolate. Or wine. Or both.

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Pearl asked on my last post "If I stop right now and decide I can try to move on, will I regret it a few years from now? "

I can't of course answer that. I firmly believe that for most of us, we will know when it is time for the decision that is right for us. I didn't have a choice to stop trying to conceive - my IVF clinic told me/us to stop. But I/we didn't then look at donor egg, or fostering, or adoption. That was our choice. We drew a line and said "enough." I won't say I have never wondered if we made the right decision. But most of the time, I know it was the right decision for us. I don't regret it, and in fact, as time moves on, I am less and less likely to regret. And I'm not the only one.

Example 1: Over the weekend, my husband and I were roped into babysitting our adorable 3 year old niece while her parents attended a wedding. At the end of the evening, my exhausted husband looked across the chaotic room covered in Lego/books/blocks/half a chocolate marshmallow Santa, and said "maybe we should be glad we don't have children." He was kind of joking, but not really.

Example 2: Chatting with a friend who went through pregnancy losses about the same time I did, she commented recently "you know, I look back and think that maybe we were lucky we didn't get what we wanted."

I think our brains are amazing at convincing us that we make the right decisions. They stop us regretting the choices we make. I think we are wired to believe our choices are right, and to like or at least accept the lives we have. It is perhaps a version of Stockholm syndrome. If we don't, won't or can't adjust to our new realities, we will be miserable. It's called survival.

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

“I remember hearing
from women further down the path than I, and listening to them talk about
acceptance, and me thinking, loudly: “BULLFUCKINGSHIT. That is just bullshit.
How could anyone ever accept this hell. You are lying to yourself. I will never
accept this.”

I suspect I might have been one of the people she has sworn
at!

I think part of it is the definition we ascribe to the word acceptance.For me, acceptance
means the ability to live our lives the best way we can, within the constraints
of our lives.In other words, we can’t
have kids (whether short term or permanently), but we can still have a good
life, enjoy ourselves, and appreciate the parts of our life that we wouldn’t
have if we have children. That latter part is the hard bit often. Acceptance doesn’t
mean that we are rejoicing we don’t have children, and it doesn’t mean we didn’t
really want them.It’s that guilt thing
again.It is not a betrayal to accept
the life I have, and make the most of it.I mean, what choice is there?And
isn’t it better to be happy than sad?

Of course, none of this happened over night – for me, or I
suspect for any of the women who have gone through this.It takes time.But yes, even for those disbelievers out
there swearing at me right now, it is possible.And it’s good.Acceptance means that the burden of guilt,
the burden of sadness, the burden of wanting what you don’t have, all that is
gone.And there is a real freedom in
that.

Wednesday, 7 December 2011

I'm not sure why, but about a year or so ago, I started searching infertility blogs on the internet. By this stage I had been blogging for a while, and although I'd talked about my infertility briefly, I really hadn't felt that it was the place to go into details. I had earlier found great support on an internet forum, and have made some lifelong friends, but as they drifted off, became parents (through whatever means), it just didn't seem the place where I could talk about my thoughts any more. And so it had been some years since I'd had an outlet for my thoughts on this most personal of subjects. And I wondered what the on-line community was like.

So I googled. One of the first sites I came to, read, and liked, was Pamela's Silent Sorority/ A Fresh Start. She'd written a book, and I downloaded it - one of the first ebooks I bought - and enjoyed it. Here was an intelligent, articulate woman I could relate to, a woman who says it like it is, a woman who has inspired so many others going through infertility. I found a woman about my age, who was also living a no-kidding lifestyle, and who understood the negatives and the positives of this choice. I didn't feel quite so alone.

She inspired me to start reading more widely, ultimately to start blogging, and to "come out" more publicly too. And now, she's asked me to write a guest post on A Fresh Start. If you don't visit her blog regularly, you should. And you especially should to read this post!

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

Ten years really is a lifetime ago. I can honestly say that the only time I felt
sad in the weekend (well, when I wasn’t thinking about my father who would have
turned 83 yesterday), was when I was thinking about my husband and the lack of
children in his life. (I've got a post brewing about how this affects our men - and our their loss affects us. But that's for another day.) I had a good weekend, even while I recognised the ten year mark. The sadness has gone. Maybe not permanently, but certainly for most of the time.

You see, I can’t imagine what it would be like to have
a nine year old – or can imagine it only fleetingly - simply because I never had an eight year old,
or a seven year old, or a six year old, etc etc. It is simply too much of a mental leap to
imagine being a parent of a nine year old, and so I just don’t think about
it. I could try to force myself, but that would be like hitting my head against a brick wall. And why would I do this? I think this is actually how time heals, and
why it is possible for me to say now that I’m very happy with my life.

I know that after pregnancy loss, some women spend the
entire nine months thinking about where they “should” have been in the
pregnancy, and then a lesser number spend time marking how old their
children would have been. I do that only
rarely. I remember following how many weeks pregnant I would have been, in the first few months after my ectopics, my brain torturing me to remember, scared to forget, if that makes any sense.
But after I wrote all the details down, I was free not to dwell on
it. And so it helped me heal.

These days, I rarely think about dates or what-ifs – and if
I do it tends to end up here on this blog, so perhaps gives a distorted picture
of how I feel about my infertility, my losses.
My ten year anniversary crept up on me by surprise. I have to think back and calculate how old my
eldest would have been. But it is all
theoretical. The emotion that used to be
there, isn’t there anymore, not usually. My
infertility, and my losses – they’re still part of me. They made me who I am. But these days I am at ease with that. I like writing those words ... at ease. They represent a release of sadness, of
bitterness, of guilt. They show acceptance,
and peace. And I like that. Because that’s how I feel right now.

Friday, 2 December 2011

In commenting on another post about their month of
remembrance and sadness, I realised December had arrived, my own month of
memories.I realised that it was at this
time that I found I was pregnant for the first time.I was in Manila on a business trip, and
calculated that I was late.I had been as
regular as clockwork.In fact, by the
end of the day my period was due, I suspected something was up.I stopped over in Singapore for the weekend
with family, and put it to the back of my mind.When I
finally got home, I plucked up courage to go buy my first ever pregnancy test.

By that stage we had been trying for almost two years.I travelled a lot for work so being in the
right place at the right time wasn’t really working for us.I hadn’t really been stressing about it, though
I was feeling a little sad as I suspected it wasn’t going to happen.

I remember seeing the line come up.I walked downstairs and showed my
husband.I remember sitting down, in
shock, not knowing what to think.I remember
my husband sending me flowers the next day at work, and a few days later being
particularly innovative about managing the “why I wasn’t drinking” stories at
some functions I attended.But it had no
sooner sunk in that I was pregnant than I started bleeding.My wonderful GP acknowledged I’d probably had
a miscarriage, but insisted on testing my hCG levels to ensure it was exactly that –
a miscarriage.Of course, it wasn’t.I do wish all GPs exercised her caution – there would
be fewer deaths from ectopic pregnancy, fewer emergency surgeries and medical treatment, fewer women traumatised by coming face to face with their own mortality.

I look back today, and realise it has been ten years since
that first BFP. It seems
like yesterday; it seems like a lifetime ago.

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

December is almost here, the beginning of the official
Christmas (or for those of you in the US – holiday) season.It can be a tough time for those of us
without children.I’ll write more about
different aspects of this, and how I get through it, later in the month.

Now is when we start thinking about sending cards.I’ve seen discussions from friends in the US and
Canada, the inadequacy they feel when they send out their own cards, with
photos of two (with the odd beloved pet thrown in) when they receive cards
with photos of their friends and all their children.The pain of opening cards and seeing yet
another seemingly happy family, perhaps a new arrival in the photograph, and
then have to look at those photos till after New Year.What a sock in the face that must be.

Fortunately, here in New Zealand, the personalised photo
cards are very rare.In fact, the only
ones that I ever receive are from friends in the US. I find it a somewhat odd custom. Perhaps we’re a bit lower key in New Zealand,
but we don’t presume to think our friends want our faces looking back at them
throughout the festive season.In the spirit of the season, we send
cards to our friends and family that are about them, not about us.

I carefully choose cards that will fit the
recipient.I think I would have done
that regardless of whether photo-cards were traditional here in New
Zealand.(After all, I do it with my own home-made cards for friends and family throughout the year).And I hate to bow to a tradition if it doesn’t
work for me.

So at Christmas, my religious friends get a card with a
biblical scene on it.Children, or
friends/relatives get cards with Santa, often humorous ones in New Zealand that
show Santa with a suntan, lying on the beach with the reindeer, a beer in hand,
and a barbecue sizzling away in the background, you know the type.Other friends will get elegant Christmas
trees, or decorations, or for my Buddhist/Muslim friends/family I will hunt out New
Year cards.

It means Christmas cards have never been a source of pain
for me.And for that, I’m very thankful.

Perhaps I lie.They
can be a bit painful, but only when I either a) receive a card from someone I’ve
forgotten to send one to, and it’s too late to get one posted before Christmas,
or b) when I don’t receive one from people I really want to hear from!

Tuesday, 29 November 2011

My husband and I went to see The Debt on the weekend. Helen Mirren is a
favourite of mine – and the reviews were of a talented cast and intelligent
script. So I was keen to see it.

I will try not to give any spoilers. I will try to choose my words carefully.

I thought the movie was very good. We went for an Indian meal after the movie, and discussed it. Any movie that causes a discussion or debate, that lingers beyond the movie theatre, is good in my book. The Debt is not a big “shoot-em-up” movie, but one
based on suspense, a mystery, and characters finely honed, subtly
portrayed. My kind of movie.

It was a thriller. So
I knew there would be tension. I found
it in an unexpected place, in a very powerful presentation of how the woman
agent’s bravery far eclipsed that of her male colleagues. I almost physically recoiled at the scenes in
the fertility doctor’s office. I hardly
recall feeling so horrified at a movie. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying there was blood or gore or cruelty. They didn't need these devices to make a powerful scene. I
don’t think men will get how creepy, how very disturbing, those
scenes were. Brilliantly played, I
thought. But yes, horrific, and
traumatic. I think any woman would find them so. A woman who has been through infertility
might find them especially so.

Which is why I felt I needed to make this a public service
announcement. I want to warn you, if
you’re feeling raw and vulnerable about seeing fertility specialists, then that
this might not be the movie for you. Personally
I’m very glad I saw it. But I feel light-years
away from a fertility specialist’s office these days. It might be different if I had to walk into one next week.

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

It is easy for those of us without children but who had wanted children, in our
lower moments, to think that if we only had children all our problems would be
solved, or to dwell on how happy and fulfilled we would be.And yet we all know that’s not how it would
be.There’s a saying warning us to “be
careful what we wish for.”And for good
reason.Nothing is ever quite what you
expect.

So at times, I think about what my life might be like if I
had children.And my mind doesn’t always
turn to the positives.More realistic
now than when I was trying to conceive, I wonder if:

my life would have turned into drudgery, and the house turned
into a tip, because I cannot imagine I would have been Supermum.

I would be constantly tired and irritated.I know I wouldn’t have found a hidden energy.
I suspect that any reserves of patience would be hiding out with the hidden energy.

I would feel resentful of my husband, resenting the fact
that he wanted children, and blame him.

I would forget those years of wanting children, and remember
only the years when I didn’t want children.

I’d be fatter because I finished off my children’s food, or
if I’d be thinner because I’d never get time to eat.I suspect it would be the former.

I’d have grown gray not so gracefully, simply because I
wouldn’t have time to get my hair coloured.

my days would fly by, never being able to achieve what I had
planned, and see the years fly by in turn, or alternatively, if the days would
drag by, the chores never-ending.

I would feel trapped at the end of the world, trapped in my
life, trapped looking after children.

Of course, I will never know how I would have felt.But sometimes, these days, I do breathe a
sigh of relief, and think that maybe I was lucky I didn’t have children. Sometimes, and increasingly often, there are no regrets. It helps, it really does, to look honestly at this side of
my life that might have been, to be honest about my personality and capabilities, and even (at times) to be glad that I don’t
ever have to find out.

After all, isn’t happiness wanting what you have, not
getting what you want?

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About Me

This is my blog on living and loving life without children after infertility. Currently I'm a blogger, a self-employed businessperson, amateur photographer, and traveller.

I blog on A Separate Life about my everyday life, but this is a space for thoughts on my No Kidding lifestyle, the good and the bad, remembering what was lost, and celebrating what I have.

My husband and I are the stereotypical couple without children who love to travel. I am (at) travellingMali on Instagram and there I post photos of various trips internationally, past and present, and of NZ travels, along with the occasional photos from where I live.

In 2013 I travelled in Europe and the Middle East for five months, and kept a blog at Lemons to Limoncello.

I also had a travelblog some years ago, but stopped posting in 2012, which you can see at Mali's Travelalphablog. I'm hoping to start a travel blog again, so watch this space!